Chinese tire manufacturer to invest US $240M in Guanajuato

Sailun Jinyu Group, a Chinese manufacturer of tires for light-duty vehicles, has announced it will open a plant in León, Guanajuato, with an investment amounting to US $240 million.

This will be the first manufacturing plant in North America for Sailun Jinyu Group, which is headquartered in Qingdao, China. The León location will manufacture semi-steel radial tires for cars, SUVs and small trucks.

Sailun ranks among the top 20 tire manufacturers in the world, with plants in China, Vietnam and soon Mexico. (sailun-tyres.eu)

The move is the result of a joint venture between Sailun Jinyu and TD Mexico, the parent company of Tire Direct and the largest tire distributor in Mexico.

The partnership will be named SL & TD Tire Manufacturing, and will be predominantly owned by Sailun. Its Singapore subsidiary will hold 51% of the stake, while Tire Direct will hold the remaining 49%. Sailun will oversee construction, equipment installation, and production of the plant, while TD Mexico will provide administrative support and manage process flows.

To build the plant, Sailun and TD Mexico have allocated US $192.78 million to be distributed over a 12-month construction phase. Once the plant starts operating, it is expected to create over 650 jobs.

The venture has set an initial production target of 6 million semi-steel radial tires annually. It also plans to produce 1.65 million all-steel radials per year for larger trucks and buses in a future expansion.  

Sailun estimates an annual revenue of US $219.42 million at total capacity, with a net profit of $4.06 million.

The tire market in Mexico is one of the largest and most competitive in the region. Across the country, Sailun has global competitors such as Michelin, Pirelli, Goodyear, Bridgestone, Continental and Hankook.

According to data from the National Association of Tire Distributors and Renewal Plants (ANDELLAC), the Mexican tire market moves around 6 million units annually, with an estimated value of more than US $2.5 billion.

With reports from El Sol de León

1 COMMENT

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
CIUDAD JUÁREZ, CHIHUAHUA, 02FEBRERO2026.- Ciudad Juárez registra afectaciones laborales derivadas de la quiebra del corporativo estadounidense First Brands Group, del cual dependen maquiladoras como Brake Parts Inc. (BPI Manufacturing), dedicadas a la producción de autopartes. De manera preliminar, se estima que alrededor de mil 500 trabajadores han sido afectados por el cierre de al menos cinco plantas en esta frontera, situación que se presenta desde finales de 2025, cuando la empresa inició un proceso de bancarrota en Estados Unidos. Ante la falta de información sobre pagos y liquidaciones, empleados han permanecido en las afueras de las maquiladoras, exigiendo información sobre su situación laboral y el cumplimiento de sus derechos.

Mexico’s manufacturing sector has slow start to 2026

0
Mexico’s monthly manufacturing production volumes fell by 1.8% in January, marking the second consecutive monthly decrease and the most pronounced since July 2015.
Potatoes

Canada reaches deal to export potatoes to Mexico, formerly an exclusive privilege of the US

6
The key agreement coincided with the early stages of the USMCA review and represented a key inroad for Canada into a new segment of the Mexican market.

Mexico extends tariffs on steel imports from Asian countries with no trade pact

0
The tariff extension goes hand in hand with a new government policy prioritizing Mexican content over overall cost when purchasing products or components from abroad.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity